Maine
32 Maine influencers you should be following
Mainers are not easily influenced.
People here take pride in not following all the latest trends and in the fact that we get most of the fads and new stores after they’ve already made it to the rest of the country. That said, Mainers are always interested in what their fellow Mainers have to say.
That’s probably why there are so many Maine-based influencers, for lack of a better word, folks with creative and extensive social media accounts who add their own voices to the varied and vibrant conversation about Maine life. They range from funny takes on the Maine accent or shoveling snow or doing the groceries, to dining reviews, holistic health tips and adorable photos of cats and dogs.
Here are a few suggestions for fun, thought-provoking, informative or creative Mainers — including some non-human ones — with social media accounts to follow and what you might expect from them.
Alexander Widener
@alexander_widener on Instagram (158K) and TikTok (129.5K)
Widener worked in New York City, in fashion and home decor, before moving to Wiscasset and opening an interiors shop, Widener Company. In videos he offers info on specific antiques, including on Staffordshire dog figurines from England. He also shows off and explains various antique “hauls” he made recently.
Amy Stacey Curtis
@amystaceycurtis on Instagram (3K) and @amystaceycurtis on TikTok (37.4K)
Since 2022, Lewiston-based installation artist Amy Stacey Curtis has been using music to help recover from a serious medical condition. On Instagram and TikTok, she’s shared hundreds of videos of herself playing ukulele and singing well-known songs like “Purple Rain,” “I Won’t Back Down” and “Rebel Yell.” She’s a wonderful singer, and describes what she’s doing as “self-prescribed occupational therapy” to heal her brain, and, in turn, her speech. In 2017, Curtis believed that a demon in her head was telling her to take her own life. The condition also impacted her ability to speak and walk. It took a year of doctors appointments to land on a Lyme disease diagnosis.
Autumn Acord
@autumn.acord on Instagram (94.5K) and @autumnacord (295K) on TikTok
This account follows a 20-something Maine native who went to Maine Maritime Academy in Castine and then went to work in finance. Videos show her putting makeup on, making dinner, making her bed or showing off some pottery. She says she does not want to identify cool, out of the way local spots in her posts, so they won’t “blow up” with too many visitors.
Meredith Steele offers her take on Maine life on Babiesofsteele. (Photo courtesy of Meredith Steele.)Babies of Steele
@babiesofsteele on Instagram (426K) and TikTok (1.1M)
Meredith Steele is a Midcoast resident, and mother, with some pretty strong and funny opinions. Her videos range from fairly serious ones lately on ICE, to a take on why it’s not worth your energy to argue with some people on social media.
Chef Adam Libby
@chefadamlibby on Instagram (580K), Chef Adam Libby on Facebook (454K) and @chefadamlibby on TikTok (2.6M)
Put a little love in your heart, and learn how to cook some tasty dishes with Lincoln-based superstar chef Adam Libby, who has Down Syndrome. His instructional videos include cheesy corn dip, game day cookies, pizza bites, pumpkin pie and several other mouthwatering comfort foods. Libby is a young man with a passion for food and cooking — and a catch-phrase (“Holy Crow, Man”).
Daniel and Bigfoot
@shopperstv on Instagram (7,056) and @shoppers_hardware on TikTok (79K)
Two cats are living the best of all nine lives at Shoppers True Value in South Portland. Daniel and Bigfoot love to nap all over the store, including a favorite bed in the paint department. Daniel arrived in 2022 and Bigfoot moved in a year later. One post shows Daniel in a Cat Noodles bed, another shows Bigfoot curled up on a pile of bath mats. There are also whimsical videos of the shop cats. Both are certifiable legends, and are so popular there’s a line of Daniel and Bigfoot-themed merchandise at the registers.
Daphne Michelle Designs
@daphnemichelledesigns on Instagram (9 K) and TikTok (2.5K )
Portland-based designer Daphne Michelle Murphy makes clothing from used materials, and is particularly adept at turning kitschy pro sports teams blankets into hip outwear. Her posts show some before- and after-shots of New England Patriots’ blankets that she made into pretty stylish jackets. She demonstrates in one video how she made a Sabrina Carpenter Halloween costume from stuff she found at her local Goodwill.
Dog Named Stella
@dognamedstella on Instagram (1M) and @dognamedstella on TikTok (823.2K)
In 2015, Freeport resident Jody Hartman starting posting videos of his Labrador retriever Stella blissfully running head first into gigantic leaf piles. The clips caught on, and Stella, bless her, is still at it. In 2023, the Hartman family welcomed another Labrador named Mabel into their fold, and she too adores the leaves. In some posts, you’ll see Stella’s alter ego Judith, donning butterfly wings and racing around without a care in the world. On both Instagram and TikTok, you’ll see nothing but joy.
Downeast Cowboy
@downeastcowboy on Instagram (43.9K), @thedowneastcowboy on TikTok (185.7K)
Fisherman Kelly Hinkle is known online as The Downeast Cowboy. Originally from Addison, Hinkle lives near Pleasant River in Columbia Falls. Hinkle fishes mostly for lobster in Eastern Harbor, and often broadcasts the hauling of lobsters live on TikTok. Sometimes a landlubber, Hinkle also shares footage of other travels around the state.
Eating Portland Alive
@eatingportlandalive on Instagram (16K) and Threads (2.7K)
This account is a visual feast of Portland food and drinks, with locations and other info, so you can then go out an have an actual feast. The Instagram page begins with “Warning: gratuitous foodity” and it can be shockingly addictive.
Fresh Eggs Daily
@fresheggsdaily on Instagram (121K).
Lisa Steele’s Instagram bio describes her as a “5th generation chicken expert, cook/baker, TV host and author of the upcoming book “Gardening with Chickens.” She’s been raising chickens and ducks for more than 15 years, and dispenses advice on how to keep them healthy and happy. Her Instagram account is packed with a range of related photos and videos, including visiting her many chickens and ducks on a sunny morning when it’s 7 degrees below zero. Another sweet clip shows several ducks snacking from a store-bought veggie platter. Broccoli was the biggest hit.
Lobster fisherman Jacob Knowles.Photo courtesy of Jacob Knowles
Jacob Knowles
@jknowles831 on Instagram (968K) , jacob_knowles on TikTok (3.3M) and @jacobknowles5421 on YouTube (2.54M)
Jacob Knowles is a fifth-generation lobster fisherman based in Winter Harbor. On social media, he shares videos about his work that are both educational and entertaining. Knowles often offers encouraging words to lobsters that aren’t legal to catch, then sends them back into the ocean with a snack. He also will take the time to remove pesky barnacles from lobsters in a process called the “claw spa treatment.”
Jeremy Miranda
@jeremy_miranda_ on Instagram (249K)
Jeremy Miranda is a Maine-based painter with just under a quarter of a million followers on Instagram. Using acrylic paints, his works are visually stunning and feature scenes like wintry landscapes and sunsets. One post is a video set to music of Miranda mixing paints and then adding to a painting. A recent post features a bonfire painting that Miranda is auctioning off to benefit the Women’s Foundation of Minnesota.
Katie Zarrilli
@katiezarrilli on Instagram (20.5K); @katie.zarrilli on TikTok (14.4K)
Zarrilli, a former TV newscaster who lives in Gorham, has a knack for quick, funny takes on Maine life. While reeling off “Things mainers do/say that would confuse people from elsewhere,” she blurts out “I haven’t seen traffic like that since the Phish concert” and “No, I way prefer the Westbrook Hannaford.” And she produces fast-paced videos where she plays the personalities of all 16 counties.
Karl Ramsdell
@karl.ramsdell on Instagram (82.8K)
Photographer Karl Ramsdell is a paddleboarder and surfer, and uses his intimate knowledge of Maine’s ocean waters to fill his Instagram page with images of nature, especially seals. He often photographs seals from his paddleboard, so as not to scare them. He’s also captured foxes, birds, deer and otters for his posts.

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The Leighton Show
@the_leighton_show on Instagram (773K) and @the_leighton_show on TikTok (629.7K)
Cape Elizabeth resident Chip Leighton started posting clips on TikTok five years ago. At the heart of his online presence is a series called “Teenager Texts.” Leighton’s face is shown with the texts scrolling above, usually with a popular song playing in the background. The Best of 2025 post included zingers like “Do you think kidnapping a deer for 48 hours is insane?,” “My car is saying something in Spanish: Door ajar” and “I need an authentic Swedish dessert for school tomorrow.” Texts are submitted from all over.
@the_leighton_show My new book is available for pre-order! Link in bio. Comes out April 21st #teenager #text #funny #dad #dadcanyounot ♬ Rio (2009 Remaster) – Duran Duran
The Maine Foodies
@themainefoodies on Instagram (107K) and Threads (13.1K)
A Portland couple, Lexi and Erik Dirkmaat, do their best to discover “hidden gems, inspiring stays and the best bites” around Maine and share them with their followers. A typical video combines shots of the Old Port or Portland Headlight with shots of lemon being dribble over oysters and foaming coffee drinks, backed by the song “Home” by Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros.
Mainely Emma
@mainlyemma on Instagram (94.5K) and TikTok (23.9K)
Emma Hughes, a self-described “professional baby whisperer” from Brunswick worked as a full-time nanny and is a postpartum doula. Her posts include holistic health and wellness discussions, including some personal ones about how hard it is to find love or getting a tattoo.
Margaret Skiff
@margaretskiff on Instagram (50.3K) and TikTok (112.2K)
Skiff, of Portland, lets people follow along with renovations of a 100-year-old duplex, and also posts about related adventures. Recent posts include finding a wedding dress at an estate sale, thrifting, vintage shopping and some wisdom about Maine life, like how you’re being “selfish” if you don’t brush the snow off your car before driving off.
@margaretskiff Estate sales are always so bittersweet #estatesale #comethriftingwithme #vlog #weddingdress ♬ Coffe and Jazz – Baby thug
Mister Mainer
@mistermainer1 on Instagram (2M) and mistermainer on TikTok (20.9 M)
Biscuit and Joy, an English Bull terrier mix and an English Bull terrier, have been the stars of these accounts created by Mainer Dmitry Pepper since 2021. Some videos show one of the dog’s adopting the persona of real estate agent Karen Bark, sometimes the dogs are shown just living their best doggie lives. Posts also talk about the importance of adopting dogs.
Molly in Maine
@mollyinmaine on Instagram (108K)
Molly Walpuck of St. George is a lifestyle blogger and home decorator with more then 100K followers on Instagram. She likes in an idyllic seaside home with her husband John and springer spaniels Maddie and Cisco. Walpuck’s vibrant posts show her home through the seasons, along with images from her travel adventures. A recent post features a gallery of photos, including a cozy, plant-filled sitting area and a kitchen counter with a simple floral arrangement and lit candle, with the caption “Small joys, during a time in our country that often feels unbelievably heavy.”
Moustache Nugget Mews
@moustachemews on Instagram (3K)
There are lots of dog-focused influencers out there, but here’s another one for the cat lovers among us. This fluffy black and white kitty, nicknamed “Nuggy,” has what appears to be a white mustache under his nose on an otherwise black face. The posts mostly show the cat being adorable, stuffing himself into small space or turning his belly skyward.
My Maine
@my_maine on Instagram (26.7K)
Digital creator Katherine Mills lives in western Maine, but her travels bring her all over the state. For about the past eight years, she’s been documenting where she goes, and what she sees and does on the Instagram page My Maine. Her focus is on the outdoors, and posts are often packed with useful information. In one about winter hiking in Maine, Mills lists essential clothing and gear, including merino wool socks, waterproof hiking pants and insulated boots with traction.
Nostalgia Maine
@nostalgiamaine on Instagram (12.7K)
Who doesn’t love old photos? People who’ve lived in Maine forever will look at these photos and videos and say “I remember that” or “Portland was so much better then.” But new residents can also get a sense of what their city or town used to look like. There’s a cool 1958 shot of L.L. Bean when the retailer was just one of the stores in Freeport, and had yet to take over the whole town.
Plates of Portland Maine
@platesofportlandmaine on Instagram (110K)
For an inside scoop on Portland’s food and hospitality happenings, give Plates of Portland Maine a follow. The account was launched in August 2022 by Freeport-based food blogger Jordan Brocklesby. Vivid photos and clips will tantalize your taste buds, and will suggest an array of cocktails, sweets and meals.
Portland Food Map
@portlandfoodmap on Instagram (85.5K)
Portland Food Map has its finger on the pulse of the restaurant and food scene in and around Portland. On Instagram, they serve up photos with corresponding updates on openings and closings, and other food-related news. It’s a handy resource when you can’t decide where to eat.
Ryan Adams
@ryanwritesonthings on Instagram (16.4K)
Ryan Adams finishes his mural on a wall at Arabic Market in downtown Westbrook. (Staff Writer Robert Lowell)Ryan Adams is a Portland-based artist who works out of the Over Here Studio at Thompson’s Point with his wife and fellow artist Rachel Adams. Both show their work in galleries and museums. Ryan got his start as a graffiti artist, then moved into creating commissioned murals on buildings and businesses in Maine and other states. His Instagram page is the perfect place to view some of his work, including murals, digital prints, skateboard deck art, T-shirts and more.
Sam Ramsdell
@samramsdell5 on Instagram (599K) and @samramsdell5 on TikTok (3.9M)
Sam Ramsdell laughs while making videos with her partner James Reimer on Nov. 10, 2025, at their home in Falmouth. (Derek Davis/Staff Photographer)Scarborough-born Falmouth resident Sam Ramsdell is internet famous for an unusual reason. When videos of her eating during the pandemic started going viral, she was contacted by Guinness World Records, who wondered if her mouth size might be a record holder. She does indeed hold the record for widest female mouth gape. While some of her posts are about fitting things like a giant croissant in her mouth, others are hilarious clips of Ramsdell in her 1820 farmhouse, sometimes dressing the part in “Little House on the Prairie” type outfits. Her language however is a bit more salty that Ma and Pa Ingalls, so consider yourself warned.
Tatum Talks
@hi.this.is.tatum on Instagram (688K), @hi.this.is.tatum on TikTok and @TatumTalks on YouTube (54.1K)
Bangor-based Tatum is a medium-sized rescue dog from Macon, Georgia whose breed is unknown by his human parents, Charles and Nicole Lever. He’s a huge online star because of the sarcastic, side-splitting commentary he dishes out. Yes, this dog “talks,” and he always has something sassy or silly to say to his parents. In one particularly funny clip, Tatum is in a car driving by a field dotted with wild turkeys. He whispers out the window: “Hey ladies, you gotta go home. Tomorrow’s Thanksgiving, I don’t know if you knows this, but you’re turkeys. Get out of here, I won’t tell no one I saw you.”
Teagan Wright
@teaganwright on Instagram (24.2K) and @teaganwrightcomedy on TikTok (12.2)
A Maine-based comedian and content creator, Wright’s lobsterman persona videos are funny and helpful. He explains oft-used phrases and Maine towns most of us pronounce incorrectly. One video shows that a crusty Maine lobsterman is immune to the personality-changing qualities of a Snickers. He also hosts an online dating show, “Love or Lobsters.”
Traveling Mainers
@travelingmainers on Instagram (123K)
James Barrett and Elizabeth Clark are a Portland-based couple who are all about exploring Maine and New England. They document their travels with detail-packed photos and videos. Recent posts show the Asticou Hotel in Northeast Harbor and the Riverhouse Footbridge in Camden.
Vanity of Maine
@vanity_of_maine on Instagram (34.6K)
This page posts Maine vanity license plates, on cars and trucks, with no explantation of what they mean. But it’s fun to guess. Some are pretty obvious, and some are profane. A few examples include: “FORK ME,” “WHY YOU,” “OMGCATS” and “YAYCAKE.”
Maine
Wife of Colombian father killed by ICE in Maine says they had planned to grow old together
“Do we accept the idea that innocent, loving partners and loving and devoted fathers of 3-year-olds can be collateral damage to this government’s policies? Do we agree that this is just an acceptable cost of doing business?” Gideon said. “We truly believe that people need to understand what the real costs are.”
“I want to be clear about something. Johan Sebastián, before he was shot to death, had been accused of committing no crime. He was in this country lawfully, and he was following a lawful process that’s prescribed by our federal government,” the attorney said, adding that Durán had been issued a work permit and a Social Security number under the Trump administration.
ICE has said it was conducting “targeted surveillance on the last known address of an illegal alien with a final order of removal” around 7 a.m. Monday, an agency spokesperson said.
“The vehicle attempted to flee the scene and fearing for public safety an officer discharged his weapon,” the ICE spokesperson said.
Durán, who was born and raised in Bucaramanga, Colombia, had come to the U.S. in 2023 to seek better opportunities for him and his family, relatives said.
A spokesperson with the Department of Homeland Security told NBC News in an email that Durán “illegally entered the United States” through the southern border nearly three years ago “and was released into the country under the Biden Administration.”
Entering the U.S. without proper authorization is a misdemeanor, but living in the country without legal permission is a civil violation and not a criminal offense.
At work, and everywhere he went, Durán carried an infectious joy, Rojas said.
As a father, he was devoted. Aside from working cleaning and delivery jobs to provide for his family, he took their daughter, Dulce — or “gordita” (chubby) as he lovingly called her — to the park every afternoon, Rojas said.
Durán always indulged his little girl whenever she had a craving for nuggets and fries, Rojas said, adding he would often marvel in tears every time he realized his daughter “was getting bigger.”
Rojas recalled a conversation she had with Durán a few months ago, wondering who their little girl would grow up to be. Durán said he would have a hard time sending off his daughter to school for the first time, she said.
Dulce now asks for her father every night, Rojas said, breaking down in tears. “And I don’t have the strength to tell her that dad isn’t coming, that she can’t give him a hug and tell him ‘I love you.’”
Gideon said that “there will come a time when those responsible for Johan Sebastián’s needless death will have to answer for what they did. But today is not that day. … Today is about Johan Sebastián and who he was as a person.”
Maine
In Maine, Bobby Charles vs. Hannah Pingree is the race that matters | Opinion
Ralph Benko served as a deputy general counsel in the Reagan White House and worked closely with the George W. Bush administration as a contractor in its domestic policy initiative to find and rescue human trafficking victims. He lives in Maryland.
“As Maine goes, so goes the nation” was, for about a century, a political maxim. Recently, the political junkies in the capital were obsessing about the Platner vs. Collins race.
Wrong race!
Understandable, for those card-carrying members of the Columnist Party. The U.S. Senate majority, a very big deal, may hinge on that race. And that race was spiced up by the salacious and unseemly stories about the winner of the Democratic primary.
With that said, hey, junkies? Platner vs. Collins always was the wrong race to put on the marquee of your political theater. The real bellwether race is the governor’s contest between Bobby Charles and Hannah Pingree.
The political dynamics that have emerged or are emerging is less Republican vs. Democrat and more establishment insiders (Hannah Pingree, former speaker of the Maine House, whose family name has been a prominent fixture in Maine politics for over 30 years) vs. popular insurgents (Bobby Charles, on his first electoral foray).
Charles is fashioning his affordability program via a classic center-right Republican free market platform. Pingree is fashioning her affordability solution via a classic center-left Democratic public works and pro-regulatory platform.
Full disclosure, as chairman of the 190,000-Facebook follower Capitalist League, I lean center-right. My own preferences revealed, there is more to this race than programmatic preferences.
The Charles vs. Pingree race is the perfect microcosm of the national political culture.
I was a lifelong Democrat until the sensible Democratic Party left me for left field. And there they go again. The progressive Mills-Pingree-Platner party ghosts the FDR/JFK/Bill Clinton Democrats.
Bobby Charles — who worked in the Reagan White House and later directly for Colin Powell — is a modern Reaganesque figure, aligning himself with the sensible Maine population, including independents and traditional Democrats, offering common-sense policies.
Charles is running on the Republican line. Yet he has the kind of “man of the people” values that FDR embodied and Middle America embodies.
Yes, there is a lot of crazy going on in the GOP now. Charles, however, embodies classical Republican radical pragmatism. He’s not an ideologue, and is exempt from the fanaticism that so plagues our politics today. Charles is neither a zealot nor a moderate. He’s simply … capable.
Meanwhile the Democrats now, wholesale, are nominating “democratic socialists.” Wait, what? History has repeatedly shown that socialism doesn’t work, locally or nationally.
The further left you move, the more it never works. Remember Jimmy Carter’s misery index? (That’s what forced me out of my once beloved Democratic Party.)
Insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different outcomes. Let’s do sane for a change.
Hannah Pingree presents as an honorable and capable public servant. That said, she will, if elected, be badly constrained by the romantic-but-dysfunctional emerging narrative of her party, now in thrall to its fanatical base, listing so far to portside that it is about to capsize the ship of state.
Maine is one of the states most guided by common sense. Its voters will embrace the candidate with a proven agenda for affordability and security rather than a member of the party who is admittedly charming but impractically romantic (Bernie, AOC, Zohran, etc).
While the nation scratched its head at Maine’s oddly out of sync “oyster farmer” there was, and is, a more meaningful race afoot. Many who have known Bobby Charles for decades and watched him serve his country unflinchingly think he, considered a dark horse, is the odds-on favorite to pull an upset and bring common sense and real management skills to Maine’s governance.
So, political junkies? Now that Platner vs. Collins has ended, please turn your attention to the true marquee Maine race, Charles vs. Pingree. For as Maine goes, so goes the nation.
Maine
“I’m Ashamed of My Country”: Biddeford, Maine Locals Grieve Neighbor Killed by ICE
A poster of Joan Sebastián Durán Guerrero, the man killed by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, is displayed at a memorial in Biddeford, Maine.Robert F. Bukaty/AP
The day after hundreds of locals poured into the streets of Biddeford, Maine in protest of ICE’s killing of 26-year-old Joan Sebastián Durán Guerrero on Monday, I drove through the former mill town. It seemed eerily still, as if in shock. When the horrors of Minneapolis and Houston come to your small corner of New England, what can you do?
In Mechanics Park in Biddeford, a small but diligent group presented one answer: you keep showing up.
“When I woke up this morning, I knew that this was the place I should go right to,” said Wayne Miller, 71, a retired pilot of 35 years and resident of Beverly, Massachusetts. “This is my backyard. This is my neighborhood.”
He paused, then started to cry. “I’m ashamed of my country. I love the country. I’m ashamed.”
Miller was standing with a sign that read “Dissent while you still can” at the corner of Mechanics Park in Biddeford, where the protest and vigil for Guerrero had been held the day before. A nearby chain-link fence served as a memorial, lined with flowers, signs, and letters of grief and apology for Guerrero and his family. One read, “3-year-olds should be watching Bluey, not their fathers being executed.” Above a “No Trespassing” sign, someone had placed another: “Biddeford was built by immigrants.”
I spoke with Miller and others who had come out on Tuesday to continue expressing their grief for their neighbor, the second person killed by federal agents in less than a week.
“It’s one thing to see a news story from a distance,” said Tessa, 28, a waitress and resident of Biddeford. “But watching it happen close to home, it really recontextualizes the safety that you feel walking around in your neighborhood.”
For Linda Henry, 27, a retired firefighter and Gloucester, Massachusetts resident, it was only a matter of time. “I know that it doesn’t matter where you live. It’s going to happen, you know. ICE is going to come.”
“I’m ashamed of my country. I love the country. I’m ashamed.”
Guerrero was a Colombian citizen who lived in Biddeford, Maine with his partner and 3-year-old daughter. He is one of at least nine people killed by federal immigration agents since the start of Donald Trump’s second term. Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin claims Guerrero “weaponized” his vehicle during a traffic stop. But similar claims by DHS have quickly fallen apart after video footage of shootings has come to light.
Reports say that not only was Guerrero authorized to legally work in the US, but he wasn’t the target of ICE’s operations that day.
Katie, a 48-year-old educator from New Hampshire, shared her anger. “A gun is not a license to kill. These agents have no business drawing their guns,” she said. “They aren’t judge, jury, and executioner, and they don’t have the right to be killing people the way that they are.”
“We were taught from the time we were little, ‘liberty and justice for all.’ We were taught that the United States was a place for everyone, and the current regime has changed that,” Katie continued.

Most of the protesters were standing with signs on the sidewalk along the adjacent intersection, shouting “ICE OUT” while passing cars honked. Near the memorial, a man on a bike caught my eye. He was off to the side, alone, quietly reading the letters addressed to Guerrero.
He introduced himself as Diego, 30, a restaurant worker and Biddeford resident. “I knew the guy. He was always around,” he said. “I was working and I was about to cry, to be honest. Because it’s injustice, you know? I’m an immigrant, and this country was built for immigrants.”
“We work, we pay taxes. We also need rights, as everybody does,” he said. “It’s not about left or right. It’s not about a political party. It’s about human rights.”
He told me that while he’s never felt disrespected by his neighbors and the people of Biddeford are good, the government is not the same. He said he feels unsafe and his community of immigrants feels like it’s hiding.
“How many need to die for us to understand?” Diego said. “He’d got a kid, a little daughter. And that’s the most devastating. Because, you know, if I do something wrong, I can say ‘I’m sorry, I apologize.’ But he’s dead. There’s no apology that can bring him back, you know? He’s dead. I can’t even believe it, I can’t even believe this is happening.”
When I asked Diego why he had stopped on his bike, he said out of solidarity—for Guerrero, for his partner and daughter. And when I asked what he would say to his community, he said, “Thank you for all the solidarity of people. Thank you for all the understanding. And I hope we can stop the violence.”
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